On a bitterly cold and windy day in January, I met up with some friends
to tour and make photographs in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania’s Nisky Hill Cemetery.
Great art comes from great pain. Fifteen degrees with a wind chill right off
the Lehigh River that can numb gloved fingers in fifteen minutes. Some snow and
ice remained on the ground from a prior time, much as the monstrous and rusting
hulks of the Bethlehem Steel blast furnaces sat dormant across the river. These
“steel stacks” can easily be seen through the leafless trees at the edge of the
cemetery. Looking toward them makes you assume that many of the graves here
must have belonged to steel workers.
Or not. This was more likely an elite cemetery, with the
actual immigrant steel workers buried in rude churchyard cemeteries like St. Michael's
on the south (opposite) side of the river. Nisky Hill Cemetery appears to be in an affluent neighborhood of Bethlehem (check out this Christmas house across the street).
From what little I’ve been able to ascertain, Nisky Hill Cemetery was founded in 1864 as a Moravian burial ground. The original “Union Cemetery” (having nothing to do with the Grand Army of the Republic) at the eastern end of this large rectangular property, appears to have been annexed to Nisky Hill at some point in time. The old gates along the front of the cemetery (East Church Street) offer the words “UNION CEMETERY” spelled out on them in wrought iron. I will assume Bethlehem Union Cemetery predates Nisky Hill.
The main entrance here is a bit odd. The entire cemetery is
essentially build into the river bank, and slopes down toward it. Nisky Hill
Cemetery is owned by the Bethlehem Area Moravians, Inc., a privately-held corporation
which, it seems, has been in the local cemetery business since 1823 (ref.). Why, I’m
not sure. I could fill a book with what I don’t know about the Moravians, so I’ll
save that research for another time. Suffice it to say that “Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania was founded in 1741 by a group of Moravians, members of a church
that traces its heritage to pre-Reformation fifteenth-century central Europe”(ref.).
While it was a bit uncomfortable being out in the elements on this bright chilly winter’s day, it was actually kind of a cake walk. After some recent visits to abandoned cemeteries where I had to climb over fences and fall out of trees, this visit to Nisky Hill was so easy it seemed like I was getting away with something! While there was snow on the ground, the roads were plowed – in fact, the gates were wide open and we drove right in! Sometimes you take such conveniences for granted. There are in fact many cemeteries I’ve visited in winter where they don’t even plow the snow off the roads or even unlock the gate! Nisky Hill Cemetery is well-maintained and safe. I would guess that the caretaker lives on site in the old office building (there was a swing set behind it).
As we made our way methodically from one mausoleum to the next, I kept thinking about the heating packets for my gloves that I left in the trunk of my car. Oh well, cold fingers are better than the bloody ones ripped up by barbed wire a few weeks ago as a result of my last cemetery exploration! Today, we had a warm running vehicle to which we could adjourn about every fifteen minutes. Pampered.
As photographers, my friends and I ran off in our separate directions,
pursuing our personal visions. Sometimes these interact, sometimes they are at odds
with each other. While it can be interesting to see how different people photograph the same scene (like we did with the Civil War cannon above), I rather enjoy totally
missing some awesome detail that a friend points out! In the case at Nisky
Hill, I would have totally missed a few things, wrapped up in my own world of
zinc monuments and snow. My friend Jonathan pointed out the disembodied heads (photos above)
and the color photographic mausoleum glass window shown below.
Dormant blast furnaces of Bethlehem Steel lurk across the Lehigh River |
From what little I’ve been able to ascertain, Nisky Hill Cemetery was founded in 1864 as a Moravian burial ground. The original “Union Cemetery” (having nothing to do with the Grand Army of the Republic) at the eastern end of this large rectangular property, appears to have been annexed to Nisky Hill at some point in time. The old gates along the front of the cemetery (East Church Street) offer the words “UNION CEMETERY” spelled out on them in wrought iron. I will assume Bethlehem Union Cemetery predates Nisky Hill.
Office at main entrance, Nisky Hill Cemetery |
Interesting example of a "pre-need" cemetery monument |
While it was a bit uncomfortable being out in the elements on this bright chilly winter’s day, it was actually kind of a cake walk. After some recent visits to abandoned cemeteries where I had to climb over fences and fall out of trees, this visit to Nisky Hill was so easy it seemed like I was getting away with something! While there was snow on the ground, the roads were plowed – in fact, the gates were wide open and we drove right in! Sometimes you take such conveniences for granted. There are in fact many cemeteries I’ve visited in winter where they don’t even plow the snow off the roads or even unlock the gate! Nisky Hill Cemetery is well-maintained and safe. I would guess that the caretaker lives on site in the old office building (there was a swing set behind it).
As we made our way methodically from one mausoleum to the next, I kept thinking about the heating packets for my gloves that I left in the trunk of my car. Oh well, cold fingers are better than the bloody ones ripped up by barbed wire a few weeks ago as a result of my last cemetery exploration! Today, we had a warm running vehicle to which we could adjourn about every fifteen minutes. Pampered.
Zinc ("White Bronze") memorial |
The what? A photographic image about two by three feet, in color, of children in a boat, playing near a small waterfall. Trees crowd the sunny sky, while a hole from a bullet or stone mars the idyllic scene. What exactly is this? It is not stained glass nor painted glass, done in the usual fashion. A photograph printed on glass, then hand-painted? A type of 1860s lantern slide or an early 1900s autochrome? This is a positive image, like a color slide transparency. I am totally curious about this, so if anyone can offer a clue as to how this was done, please comment!
Perhaps the most unusual monument in the entire cemetery was the one at the main entrance. Before we met up at Nisky Hill, my friends texted me about their impending arrival. This was about fifteen minutes after I arrived. I texted them back, “Meet you at the giant phallus.” I took a selfie before they got there, to help gauge the size - I am six foot two inches tall. Imagine. What would possess someone to install such a thing on one’s grave is beyond me, but apparently William H. Thomas was possessed by exactly that prior to his death in 1928. Maybe he wanted his monument to be higher than the steel stacks across the river? This sixteen-foot high tan (I swear) granite testament to the male ego stands out like a witty analogy amidst the much smaller, normal-sized grave markers that surround it.
According to Funeralwise.com, “Moravians focus on the simplicity of burial grounds. They believe in uniform, plain grave markers and inscriptions to emphasize the equality of all human beings.” Oddly, the phallus is right next to the office building so no one can ever miss it. "Equality" aside, whoever all there people were, the residents of Nisky Hill and Union Cemetery in Bethlehem, their choice of how to be remembered was personal. These markers and monuments represent their lives, their community, their collective soul. It is a varied collection.
Author at William H. Thomas monument |
Perhaps the most unusual monument in the entire cemetery was the one at the main entrance. Before we met up at Nisky Hill, my friends texted me about their impending arrival. This was about fifteen minutes after I arrived. I texted them back, “Meet you at the giant phallus.” I took a selfie before they got there, to help gauge the size - I am six foot two inches tall. Imagine. What would possess someone to install such a thing on one’s grave is beyond me, but apparently William H. Thomas was possessed by exactly that prior to his death in 1928. Maybe he wanted his monument to be higher than the steel stacks across the river? This sixteen-foot high tan (I swear) granite testament to the male ego stands out like a witty analogy amidst the much smaller, normal-sized grave markers that surround it.
According to Funeralwise.com, “Moravians focus on the simplicity of burial grounds. They believe in uniform, plain grave markers and inscriptions to emphasize the equality of all human beings.” Oddly, the phallus is right next to the office building so no one can ever miss it. "Equality" aside, whoever all there people were, the residents of Nisky Hill and Union Cemetery in Bethlehem, their choice of how to be remembered was personal. These markers and monuments represent their lives, their community, their collective soul. It is a varied collection.
Older Moravian grave markers |
Although Nisky Hill was originally restricted to Moravian
burials, at some point this changed. Older Moravian cemeteries have
smallish, low to the ground grave markers, almost like a memorial park or a
Quaker burial ground with no high tombstones or monuments. There are a number
of Moravian stones in this cemetery, made of white marble – perhaps twenty
inches long, fourteen inches wide, and four inches high. However, Nisky Hill/Union Cemetery evolved for the most part into a classic American Victorian-era cemetery, replete with angels, zinc monuments, mausolea, and other decorative details from that era of mourning art.
I stumbled on your blog and read thru it several times. Although I understand that people are attracted to cemeteries for different reasons, I am dismayed that your post notes many unknown answers to many questions.
ReplyDeleteIf you are ever in the area again, I encourage you to reach out to a Moravian Church in Bethlehem, the Moravian Museum or the Moravian Archives (all within walking distance of Nisky Hill Cemetery) who can give you answers to your questions.
You were walking amongst my brothers and sisters and as any cemetery attached to a denomination or not it should be respected.
They're my own brothers and sisters as well, and as such an entitled person, I give this author a pass to walk the grounds without talking to anyone or feeling at all obliged to anything outside what they normally consider "respect", as they already have.
DeleteI just found this. I'm from the area. I am a little surprised you chose NOT to include pictures of the Grace plot. Huge cover stone with a cement bench built in a semi-circle around it.
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ReplyDeleteCall (610) 866-5742
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ReplyDeleteI have family buried in the cemetery and didnt know location of plots. I went to the office and they had maps on which I located graves. This was 20:years ago.
DeleteI work there
ReplyDeleteAre there any maps of indiviual plots or at least where the different sections are? The lettered section markers make no sense since they're not in alphabetical order!!
DeleteThanks!
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ReplyDeleteYou should skip your assumptions as they are all wrong. Steel workers and other immigrants were buried in the grave yards on the South Side maintained by the churches to which they belonged, so they could be buried among their ancestors and familes.
ReplyDeleteThe history of Nisky Hill is a bit complicated. As the Moravians ran out of space in their burying ground on Market Street (toward Main) they purchased more land. Only the fenced-in corner of Nisky Hill, is dedicated to confirmed, communicate members of the Moravian churches. (So your snickering over the barber pole)(and it is ludicrous) shows your assumptions are silly.
The Moravians are buried in choirs: widowed women, widowers, married men, married women, single men old enough to marry, single women, then boy children and girl children. When Moravian dies, he or she is buried in the next available plot in their choir.
Many churches have stopped releasing burial information—because they have so many info requests which take up the time of the staff. Plus there are confidentiality issues for living descendants.
The barber pole? That’s not a barber pole. It’s a monument to the man who worked at Bethlehem Steel during WW II. That’s a representation of artillery spiraling through the air.
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